Art and origin
The true cognitive depth to the palaeolithic sculptures – their
challenge, ultimately, to our anthropological schema – seems to me the
way they suggest how self-loss and self-consciousness were intertwined.
The movement of the new world of representations was at least twofold.
One aspect (and that I have concentrated on the little figurines does
not mean I have forgotten, or mean the reader to, that the overall
image-world of the Ice Age is oriented to the bison, the mammoth, the
horse, the cave bear, the reindeer, the wolverine) involved the
invention, by the look of it somewhat suddenly, of more and more ways to
bring the realm of animals up close, imaginatively – into being, into
movement. The painters and carvers seem to have been intent on staging
and immortalising the human animal’s familiarity with – maybe its
dreamed-of inclusion in – a world where the ‘human’ was only a small
part of the show.
–
T. J. Clark
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